| No, like I said though Princeton has a Finance Certificate Program, which you have to take a little bit of econ and a good amount of math. They might have a financial engineering major, but I don't know if that's at the undergraduate level. I would suggest (if you go to Princeton) to major in something that interests you while taking these courses to fulfill the pre-requisites for the certificate program.
What kind of graduate school are you interested in? Also, why are you apprehensive about econ? I don't think you would be hurt by deflation coming from Princeton for an MBA...but at the same time, it's not like you can just mess around, you do have to get good grades. It's about work experience as well.
I would suggest something like anthropology, political science/government, history, or something. Personally, I would honestly suggest economics or a quantitative based major if you want to do finance. International business is just like knowing and understanding cultures in my opinion, it's not really a field that is taught (I mean it is taught, but it doesn't teach useful in the way accounting is).
You have to realize that these are drastically different experiences. Princeton is in the mid-atlantic, Stanford is in California. The weather will be very different. Also, Princeton is an Ivy League, there are different traditions and things like that come with that. Stanford is a legitimate Division 1 school. These are thing to think about. |